Unlocking Hidden Words
Overview
Explore and clarify vocabulary within a rich narrative poem using engaging text-marking strategies. Through sketching, circling, and annotation, students will dive into a vivid world of sea monsters and treasure, developing their independent reading and comprehension skills along the way.
Curriculum Links
Subject: English
Year Group: Year 4 (Ages 8–9)
Duration: 45 minutes
Curriculum Area:
National Curriculum for England – Reading – Comprehension
Pupils should develop their ability to retrieve and record information from non-fiction and fiction texts, identify how language, structure and presentation contribute to meaning, and check that the text makes sense to them, discussing their understanding and explaining the meaning of words in context.
Learning Objective
To use reading strategies such as textmarking, circling, and sketching to clarify the meaning of unfamiliar words within a narrative poem.
Success Criteria
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
- Identify unfamiliar vocabulary from the poem
- Use contextual clues, text-marking techniques, and sketching to infer meanings
- Discuss and justify their interpretations with a partner
- Visualise and represent selected vocabulary through creative response
Resources Needed
- Printed copies of the poem extract (one per student)
- Highlighters, coloured pens/pencils
- A3 sketching paper or learning journals
- Whiteboard and markers
- Vocabulary Clarification Toolkits (mini dictionaries/thesauruses ideally)
- Word Investigator Grid handouts
Starter: (5 minutes)
“Explorer’s Lens” Warm-up
- Begin by displaying the poem title “Red Ruby Rings from a Treasure Chest”.
- Pose: What might this poem be about? What sort of words would you expect to find inside it?
- Quick pair discussion. Ask 2-3 children to share predictions aloud.
- Explain: "Today we are going exploring – not just for treasure, but for hidden meanings inside words!"
Input & Modelling: (10 minutes)
“Circle & Sketch” Strategy Focus
- Read the poem aloud with expression (twice). First read all the way through; second read, stop to model.
- As you read, project the poem text and model circling an unfamiliar word e.g. barnacled, breaching, fronds.
- Think aloud: “I’ve never heard the word "barnacled" before. What does it look like? Barnacle… could it be something stuck to something else?”
- Then sketch a small symbol or image next to it based on the context.
- Show students how to use lines to connect words and pictures. Emphasise that the sketch is to show thinking, not art skills.
Guided Practice: (10 minutes)
Text Detectives Together
- Hand out the poem to students. Ask them to read through it once independently, circling unfamiliar words.
- Provide a mini anchor chart/poster with prompt questions:
- What word stands out?
- What clues are around it?
- What do I picture in my mind?
- Model annotating one line with a pupil volunteer using a visualiser/camera.
Independent Task: (15 minutes)
Sketch and Search
- Students choose five unfamiliar or interesting words from the poem and:
- Circle the word in the text
- Infer meaning using surrounding clues
- Sketch a quick image to represent their inference
- Label their sketch with a word or phrase meaning
- Encourage the use of coloured pens/highlighters for different strategies (e.g. red for circling, blue for sketch symbols).
- Early finishers can use the Word Investigator Grid:
| Word | What I Think It Means | Clue From Text | Real Meaning (Dictionary) |
|---|
Plenary / Review (5 minutes)
“Meaning Match” Gallery Walk
- Invite pairs to walk around the classroom and notice each other’s sketches and inferences.
- Choose 2–3 students to present one of their words and explain how they worked it out.
- Class quick vote: Did their sketch and guess make sense? Would you have guessed the same?
Extension Task (Greater Depth & Challenge)
“Into the Poem” - Creative Word Rebuild
- Curriculum Link: Writing – Composition and Vocabulary, Reading – Understandfigurative language and meaning in context.
- Choose 3–5 newly understood words (e.g. whispering tide, sea dragon, treasure chest).
- Compose a short narrative paragraph or descriptive poem using the new vocabulary.
- Challenge: Can they change the meaning or mood by editing the vocabulary choices?
(e.g. “whispering tide” becomes “raging tide” – what would that change in the story?)
Assessment for Learning
- Monitor understanding through student annotations and sketch responses
- Use the Word Investigator Grids as low-stakes formative assessment
- Listen to student justifications during sharing
- Support students still struggling by providing sentence stems:
- “I think [word] means ___ because the poem says…”
- “My picture shows ___ because…”
Differentiation
- Support: Pre-highlight a smaller selection of tier 2/3 vocabulary for some students to focus on
- Stretch: Encourage greater depth students to justify meaning using figurative language knowledge (metaphor, personification)
- EAL: Use visual dictionaries or enable bilingual word banks to support paired work
Teacher Reflection
Did students demonstrate independence in identifying and clarifying unknown vocabulary?
Did the creative element (sketching) support or distract from their comprehension?
What misconceptions about words or inference came up during the task?
Consider repeating this strategy across subjects (science/history) using similar texts to embed skills across the curriculum.
Next Steps
Introduce a non-fiction text (historical diary or explorer log) in the next session, using the same strategies.
Teach students how to build a “Personal Word Vault” to store new vocabulary they deduce from texts through the term.